Showing posts with label Mandalay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mandalay. Show all posts

Friday, April 9, 2021

May 1, 1942: Japanese Take Mandalay

Friday 1 May 1942

KV-1 tanks on parade 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Soviet KV-1 tanks on parade at the Palace Square in Leningrad, Russia, 1 May 1942 (Boris Kudoyarov, Russian International News Agency).
Battle of the Pacific: A cataclysmic clash is brewing in the South West Pacific Theater on 1 May 1942, with both sides moving large forces into position to contest the seas around Port Moresby, New Guinea. In Operation Mo, the Japanese plan to occupy Port Moresby and Tulagi in the Solomon Islands. Allied naval intelligence staffers in Melbourne, Australia, have a good idea of Japanese plans from radio intercepts and are putting this knowledge to good use. The Allies hope to take the Japanese invasion forces by surprise based on their radio intercepts and thereby stop the landings despite being numerically inferior.

Today, both sides take major steps in arranging their forces for the confrontation. Two US Navy task forces, TF 11 (USS Lexington) and TF 17 (Yorktown) rendezvous about 300 nautical miles (350 miles, 560 km) northwest of New Caledonia. Vice Admiral Jack Fletcher, in overall command aboard the Yorktown, knows he has some time and, having refueled his own ships, detaches TF 11 to refuel. Meanwhile, the Japanese send the Carrier Strike Force, including aircraft carriers Shōkaku and Zuikaku, from the fleet base at Truk. They are under the command of Vice-Admiral Takeo Takagi.
USS Neosho refuels USS Yorktown, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Tanker USS Neosho refuels fleet carrier USS Yorktown, 1 May 1942 (Naval History and Heritage Command 80-G-464653).
The Carrier Strike Force plans to sail down the eastern side of the Solomon Islands. The Japanese Tulagi Invasion Force under Rear Admiral Shima, which today pauses briefly at the Shortland Islands, Bougainville, to set up a seaplane base, will take Tulagi along the way. The Carrier Strike Force then will pass Guadalcanal and enter the Coral Sea. From there, it will cover the landings at Port Moresby. Vice-Admiral Takagi, of course, has no idea that Fletcher's two fleet carriers are waiting for him.

To soften Tulagi up, the Japanese today raid it and nearby Gavutu Islander, where Australian forces maintain a seaplane base. They badly damage a Catalina flying boat. This attack induces the Australians to evacuate the remaining serviceable Catalinas during the day.

US Navy submarine USS Grenadier (SS-210, LtCdr Willis Lent), on her second patrol out of Pearl Harbor, torpedoes and sinks 5761-ton Soviet freighter SS Angarstroi about 90 miles (145 km) southwest of Nagasaki, Japan. The Soviet commander, en route from Vladivostok to San Francisco, had decided to take a shortcut through the war zone to save coal. Along the way, the ship had been inspected for contraband in Kushimoto, but it was only carrying 7555 tons of sugar. All 60 people on board survive the sinking. Japanese merchant ship Koya Maru picks up the survivors about five hours later. While Commander Lent of the Grenadier does not take credit for this (mistaken) sinking (of an ally's ship), a postwar examination of documents during the Tokyo trials in 1946 points to the Grenadier as the likely culprit. The captain of the ship also writes a detailed account of the sinking for a Russian publication ca. 1990.

US Navy submarine Drum torpedoes and sinks 10,929-ton Japanese seaplane tender Mizuho 40 miles off Omae Zaki (Omaezaki), Japan. There are 101 deaths and 472 survivors, including her commanding officer, who are rescued by cruiser Takao. The tender actually sinks just after midnight on the 2nd.

US Navy submarine Triton torpedoes and sinks 5338-ton Japanese freighter Calcutta Maru off Wenchow, China, in the East China Sea. There are 54 dead, with an unknown number of survivors rescued by Japanese freighters Boko Maru and Kaisoku Maru.
Butch O'Hare, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Lieutenant Commander “Butch” O’Hare and F4F-4 at Norfolk, Virginia, May 1, 1942 (US Navy).
Battle of the Indian Ocean: The British have withdrawn their troops north of Mandalay, the second-largest city in Burma, so Japanese troops of the 18th Infantry Division have little difficulty occupying it on 1 May 1942. Mandalay, the last royal capital of the Konbaung Dynasty, has great symbolic importance in the country despite being eclipsed in size and economic importance by Rangoon. Japanese troops are already to the west of Mandalay, where they block the road at Monywa on the Chindwin River from units of the 1st Burma Division. This traps some British troops to their south.

Meanwhile, Japanese troops advancing from the recently-captured Lashio clash at Hsenwi with rearguard troops from the Lashio battle. The Northern Shan States Battalion, Burma Frontier Force (with elements of a detachment of the Chin Hills Battalion), holds a bridge over the Shweli River at Manwing. The Japanese need it in order to drive north to the regional center of Bhamo, so a fierce battle breaks out. The defenders hold their ground throughout the day.
Hitler cartoon, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
This cartoon in the 1 May 1942 Daily Mirror suggests that Hitler, busy with plans in the Soviet Union, has to look over his shoulder at the possibility of a Second Front. 
Eastern Front: While both the Germans and the Red Army are preparing offensives against each other along the Parpach Narrows on the Crimea, another battle to the German rear continues. General Erich von Manstein's 11th Army continues to try to breach the Soviet defenses around Sevastopol. The Wehrmacht has brought its heaviest artillery, including the 800mm Dora cannon, up to pound the fortresses guarding the port's perimeter. Luftflotte 7, under the command of General Wolfram von Richthofen, has been enlarged to the size of an air fleet (which usually accompanies an entire army group) and is sending up to 1000 sorties a day against the same targets. These planes will be turned around against the Red Army line on the Parpach Narrows when Manstein is ready to launch his offensive in about a week.

Soviet attacks against the perimeters at Kholm and Demyansk continue despite the German success in forming a supply corridor through Ramushevo to the latter town. The Kholm pocket is in crisis and has shrunk to a tiny size. However, knowing that relief is at hand props up German morale and the Soviet attacks are repelled with great difficulty.

General Franz Halder, having spent his time on leave since 26 April, leaves by train in the evening to return to the Fuhrer Headquarters in East Prussia.

European Air Operations: It is a relatively quiet day on the Channel Front, perhaps due to poor weather. The only major activity by either side is an attack by a dozen Boston bombers during the day against a parachute factory at Calais and the railway station at St. Omer. All planes return safely.
HMS Punjabi, sunk on 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMS Punjabi, sunk on 1 May 1942 (© IWM FL 25824).
Battle of the Atlantic: The battle over two Allied convoys passing north of Norway in the Barents Sea heats up on 1 May 1942. The Luftwaffe sends six Junkers Ju 88 medium bombers against PQ 15 sailing east toward Murmansk. The attack fails and only five of the planes make it back to base.

However, all is not well for the Allies despite the failed Luftwaffe raid. Royal Navy battleship HMS King George V, leading Distaff Force east of Iceland, collides with 1891-ton destroyer Punjabi in heavy fog, sinking the destroyer and damaging the battleship. There are 49 deaths and 209 survivors on the Punjabi. Also damaged is the battleship USS Washington, which blunders into the wreckage site in the fog. As Punjabi sinks, its depth charges explode, damaging Washington's fire control systems. The damage to King George V forces the Admiralty to send the battleship Duke of York up from Scapa Flow as a replacement.

The Kriegsmarine also gets into the act when three of its destroyers dispatched from port on 30 April - Zerstörergruppe "Arktis" (Z7 Hermann Schoemann, Z24 and Z25) under the command of Kapitän zur See Alfred Schulze-Hinrichs - reach convoy QP 11 sailing west from Murmansk. A classic naval battle develops between the German destroyers and the Allied convoy escorts, which form up between the attackers and the convoy. 
German Navik-class destroyer worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A German Narvik-class destroyer, similar to Z-24 and Z-25 (National Museum of the U.S. Navy - Lot-2275-44).
The German destroyers open fire at 14:05 and get the better of the engagement, They badly damage 2847-ton Soviet freighter Tsiolkolvsy using torpedoes (27 dead and 14 survivors rescued by HMT Lord Middleton). The crippled freighter eventually is sunk later in the day by U-589 (some accounts have this the other way around and claim it was damaged by the U-boat and finished off by the destroyers, but either way it sinks). During the engagement, the Germans also badly damage the old destroyer HMS Amazon with two hits. However, the Allied escorts do their job by protecting (most of) the convoy. The German destroyers depart as darkness closes in at 17:50 to look for badly damaged Royal Navy cruiser Edinburgh, which had its stern blown off on 30 April and is limping back to Murmansk at only two knots.

U-162 (FrgKpt. Jürgen Wattenberg), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes, shells, and sinks 6692-ton Brazilian freighter Parnahyba off Trinidad in the Caribbean. There are seven dead and 65 survivors who are rescued by Canadian freighter Turret Cape.

U-109 (Kptlt. Heinrich Bleichrodt), on its fifth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 6548-ton British freighter La Paz off Cape Canaveral, Florida. The ship is later salvaged, repaired, and returned to service in the US Maritime Commission.

U-69 (Oblt. Ulrich Gräf), on its eighth patrol out of St. Nazaire, spots 671-ton Canadian schooner James E. Newsom about 370 nautical miles (690 km) northeast of Bermuda. The U-boat uses its deck gun to sink the ship. All nine crewmen survive.
Hitler, Eva Braun, and Uschi Schneider, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Adolf Hitler, likely at the instigation of Eva Braun, right, poses for pictures with Uschi Schneider in the Berghof great hall on 1 May 1942. Uschi is the daughter of Eva's childhood friend Herta Schneider and he takes many photos with her.
Battle of the Mediterranean: A Lockheed Hudson (RAF No. 233 Squadron) spots U-573 (Kptlt. Heinrich Heinsohn), on its fourth patrol out of Pola, sailing on the surface north of El Marsa, Algeria. It drops depth charges and damages the submarine, with one crewman killed. The crippled U-boat puts into the neutral Spanish port of Cartagena and is interned. In August 1942, the Kriegsmarine sells it to the Spanish Navy (Armada Espanola), where it serves until 1970. U-573 ends its wartime career having sunk one ship of 5289 tons (Norwegian freighter Hellen on 21 December 1941).

At Malta, Axis bombers focus on Luqa Airfield. They attack work crews constructing pens to shelter fighters and drop delayed-action bombs to hinder later work efforts. Throughout the day, Italian Cant and Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 88 bombers attack many points on the island with a clear priority of bombing airfields. Governor Dobbie congratulates the anti-aircraft crews for claiming 110 Axis planes during the month of April 1942.

US/Vichy France Relations: The last US ambassador to Vichy France, Admiral William D. Leahy, departs on his journey home via Lisbon. The embassy will remain open under a chargé d'affaires until the US/British/Free French invasion of North Africa in November 1942.
HMCS Woodstock commissioned, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
HMCS Woodstock, a Flower-class corvette, is commissioned at Collingwood Shipyards Ltd. in Collingwood, Ontario, on 1 May 1942.
US Military: Pursuant to an agreement with the British government, the US Navy establishes the Naval Base and Naval Auxiliary Air Facility, Great Exuma, Bahama Islands, and Naval Base, Grand Cayman, British West Indies. Also established around this time is a company of the Jamaican Home Guard recruited from the Cayman Islands. The Home Guard maintains 24-hour coastal patrols for U-boats.

Soviet Government: It is May Day, so Joseph Stalin issues an Order of the Day celebrating it. He notes that:

It is beyond doubt, first, that in this period fascist Germany and its army have become weaker than they were 10 months ago. The war has brought grave disillusionments, millions of human sacrifices, starvation and poverty to the German people. The end of the war is not in sight, and reserves of manpower are coming to an end, oil is coming to an end, raw materials are coming to an end. The realization that Germany's defeat is inevitable is growing on the German people.

Stalin further notes that "our country has become stronger than it was at the beginning of the war." Notably, he praises the United States and Great Britain for taking "First place" among peoples of the world who "have joined forces against German imperialism." Such effusive praise will notably diminish as the war goes on.

American Homefront: A United Airlines Mainliner DC-3 crashes near Salt Lake City, Utah, within seven miles of Municipal Airport while en route from San Francisco to New York. The crash puzzles investigators because an eyewitness observed it heading straight into Ensign Peak of the Wasatch Mountains while circling for a landing. Poor weather may have been a factor, along with engine trouble. All 17 people on board, including a 1-year-old baby, perish.

Metro Goldwyn Mayer releases "Tarzan's New York Adventures." It stars Johnny Weissmuller and Maureen Sullivan. This is Maureen Sullivan's last film until 1948 as she raises her seven children, including future actress Mia Farrow.
Der Adler, 1 May 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A peek inside the Der Adler magazine of 1 May 1942.

April 1942

April 1, 1942: Convoys Come to the USA 
April 2, 1942: Doolittle Raiders Leave Port
April 3, 1942: Japanese Attack in Bataan
April 4, 1942: Luftwaffe Attacks Kronstadt
April 5, 1942: Japanese Easter Sunday Raid on Ceylon
April 6, 1942: Japanese Devastation In Bay of Bengal
April 7, 1942: Valletta, Malta, Destroyed
April 8, 1942: US Bataan Defenses Collapse
April 9, 1942: US Defeat in Bataan
April 10, 1942: The Bataan Death March
April 11, 1942: The Sea War Heats Up
April 12, 1942: Essen Raids Conclude Dismally
April 13, 1942: Convoy QP-10 Destruction
April 14, 1942: Demyansk Breakout Attempt
April 15, 1942: Sobibor Extermination Camp Opens
April 16, 1942: Oil Field Ablaze in Burma
April 17, 1942: The Disastrous Augsburg Raid
April 18, 1942: The Doolittle Raid bombs Japan
April 19, 1942: British in Burma Escape
April 20, 1942: The Operation Calendar Disaster
April 21, 1942: Germans Relieve Demyansk

May 1942


2021

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

April 29, 1942: Japanese Preparing Operation Mo

Wednesday 29 April 1942

Hitler and Mussolini in Salzburg 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Hitler and Mussolini at Schloss Klessheim, 29 April 1942 (National Digital Archives, Poland).
Battle of the Pacific: The Japanese are preparing Operation Mo, an invasion of Port Moresby, New Guinea, on 29 April 1942. With a large invasion force at their forward base at Truk, they also intend to occupy and install a seaplane base at Tulagi in the Solomons north of Guadalcanal (the Australians currently operate a seaplane base at nearby Gavutu-Tanambogo). Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto places Vice Admiral Shigeyoshi Inoue, a strong proponent of these aggressive moves, in charge of the naval portion of Operation Mo. General Douglas MacArthur, Allied area commander, is kept abreast of all these developments as the intelligence flows into his headquarters in Melbourne, Australia.

Japanese forces occupy Parang and Cotabato, Mindanao.
RAF Short Stirling bomber, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"Groundcrew refuelling a Short Stirling Mk I of No. 1651 Heavy Conversion Unit at Waterbeach in Cambridgeshire, 29 April 1942." the truck is an AEC 6x6 petrol tanker known as a "Matador." © IWM COL 201.
Battle of the Indian Ocean: After fierce fighting by Chinese rearguard units, the Japanese 22nd Infantry Division, Thirteenth Army, takes the key position of Lashio. The Chinese commander there, General Chang, orders all stores blown up before ordering a retreat to Hsenwi. There are quite a lot of them, as Lashio is a key stop on the Allied supply route to China.

Chang also blocks the road to Kutkai, though the Japanese seem more interested in heading west toward India than northeast to invade China. The Chinese 200th Division, which has had some success to the south at Loilem, loses its escape route by the Japanese occupation of Lashio and is forced to turn southwest before taking a roundabout route around Lashio to reach China. The entire Chinese position in Burma, which recently looked quite promising, is now completely adrift.

This Japanese success cuts communications between China and Mandalay, virtually ensuring its loss to the Allies. The British already assume that Mandalay will fall and have pulled their units north of the city. General Chang has little hope of holding out for long and is preparing to withdraw his entire force into China through Kutkai and Wanting. All Allied supplies to China, particularly US lend-lease shipments, now must be made by air. These flights must be made over the "Hump," or Himalayas, by the USAAF 10th Air Force.

The 10th Air Force also has some offensive capability. Today, it sends its B-17s to bomb Rangoon. The planes cause major damage to the dock area.
Portland, Oregon, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Portland, Oregon, officials posting evacuation orders from the United States War Relocation Authority. Printed in The Oregonian of 29 April 1942.
Eastern Front: The Germans have solidified their contact with the isolated Demyansk garrison sufficiently for engineers to string a telephone line across the Lovat River. The two overall commanders, Generals Georg von Kuechler, Oberbefehlshaber der Heeresgruppe Nord ("commander-in-chief of Army Group North"), and Walter von Brockdorff, commander of II. Armeekorps (2 Corps) in the former pocket, finally can discuss the situation without fear of being overheard. The pocket at Kholm remains in peril, but a relief force under Generalmajor Werner Huehner is approaching. Hitler is following events there closely and is prepared to send more forces to help relieve the pocket if necessary.

The Soviets are preparing an attack to sever this tenuous German connection through Ramushevo to Demyansk. However, in part due to the spring thaw ("Rasputitsa"), they are having difficulty getting troops in place to mount this operation and it will not be ready until May.
York after a Luftwaffe attack, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Damage in York after a Luftwaffe attack, 29 April 1942. Shown is a steam locomotive in the York North locomotive depot (National Railway Museum).
European Air Operations: On 29 April 1942, York recovers from an overnight Baedeker Blitz raid by the Luftwaffe. As with many other such raids, it causes only moderate damage but an inordinate number of casualties. Buildings destroyed or damaged include the Guildhall and minster. There are 79 deaths and many injured.

Tonight, 29/30 April, the  Luftwaffe attacks Norwich again. This raid destroys many buildings in the center of the city. The planes drop more than 110 high-explosive bombs despite encountering heavier anti-aircraft fire than previously. The attack is 45 minutes shorter than the previous attack on the night of 27 April but still claims an additional 69 lives.

During the day, a Luftwaffe Bf-109F-3 of 3(F)/123 succeeds in getting aerial reconnaissance of Bath, Avonmouth, and the Nailsea munitions dump. 

RAF Bomber Command, however, is not taking a break. The RAF sends half a dozen Bostons against the Dunkirk docks during the day without loss.

The RAF hits Paris/Ennevilliers in the evening, sending 88 aircraft (73 Wellington bombers, 6 Stirlings, and 9 Hampdens) against the city in bright moonlight. They run into heavy flak and fighter defenses, however. The bombing results are mediocre, with no hits made on the main target, the Gnome & Rhone aero-engine factory. There are 15 deaths and 74 injured. The RAF loses three Wellingtons.

Subsidiary raids are made to Ostend (20 bombers), minelaying (5 Manchesters off the Danish coast), and six independent intruder missions. The raid on Ostend is the first of the war, and two bombers are lost there and one on the minelaying mission.

Hauptman Joachim Muncheberg, Stab II./JG 26, shoots down a Spitfire near Le Tourquet. It is his 74th victory. The victim is likely Polish ace Major Marian Pisarek, commander of I Polish Fighter Wing.
Michigan state troopers in action, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Michigan State Troopers guarding the Sojourner Truth housing project as African-Americans move into them, 29 April 1942. Many local residents objected to the location of the projects and violent clashes led to arrests (The Faces of Detroit).
Battle of the Atlantic: Both sides have sent heavy forces to the Arctic as the Allies struggle to keep the Soviet Union supplied via the Arctic convoy route around northern Norway. The Allies have two convoys converging in the area, PQ-15 from Iceland heading east and QP-11 from Murmansk heading west. Today, a German Ju 88 reconnaissance bomber and U-boats spot QP-11 a day after it left port. The U-boats prepare to attack on the 30th. The British, meanwhile, dispatch light cruiser HMS Edinburgh (CS 18) from Murmansk to beef up QP-11's escort force.

The Soviets, however, get in the first blow. Submarine M-171 (Lt. Cdr Stanikov) torpedoes and sinks 4969-ton German freighter Curityba off Vardø, Varangerfjord, Norway. The Curityba is carrying a Norwegian fishing trawler, F-14-V, and two auxiliary minesweepers, M-5403 and M-5407 (it is unclear if the trawler is one of these), which go down with the ship. There are 34 survivors and 22 deaths.

U-66 (KrvKpt. Richard Zapp), on its fifth patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 10,354-ton Panamanian tanker Harry G. Seidel west of Trinidad. There are 48 survivors and two deaths.

U-108 (KrvKpt. Klaus Scholtz), on its seventh patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 9925-ton US tanker Mobiloil about 350 miles northeast of Turks Island in the Caribbean. This happens after an excruciating 13-hour chase which includes one torpedo miss. The U-boat finally gets into position and hits the tanker at 08:57, then surfaces and begins shelling the ship. The tanker crew, meanwhile, returns fire with their own 4-inch stern gun. A long battle ensues into the late afternoon. Finally, Scholtz fires more torpedoes (for a total of six, a large number for a commercial shipping target) that break the tanker in half. All 52 men on board survive, picked up by USS PC-490 on 2 May 1942. The tanker's master, Ernest V. Farrow, is later convicted for failing to follow orders to wait for a convoy off Norfolk.

The US is finally organizing coastal convoys on the East Coast. Today, the first coastal convoy departs from New York to the Delaware River, and other convoys also begin.

The surviving 27-man crew of US freighter Steel Maker, sunk by U-136 on 19 April, is rescued today by British freighter Pacific Exporter near Frying Pan Shoals.
Construction of Allis Chalmers plant in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Construction of the Allis Chalmers Supercharger Plant in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 29 April 1942 (Milwaukee Public Library).
Battle of the Mediterranean: Royal Navy submarine HMS Urge sinks on 29 April 1942 while en route from Malta to Alexandria after hitting a mine while sailing on the surface. The incident happens not long after Urge leaves Grand Harbour, Malta. The submarine is torn in two by the violent explosion and sinks rapidly with no survivors There are 39 deaths, including war correspondent Bernard Gray. The wreck is discovered in October 2019 lying in 130 meters (430 feet) of water two miles (3.2 km) off the Malta coast.

Royal Navy 81-ton tug Alliance hits a mine and sinks off Famagusta, Cyprus. There are three deaths and seven survivors. British 157-ton schooner Terpsithea also hits a mine and sinks at the same location. Everyone on the schooner survives.

Malta's military governor, Lt. General Sir W. Dobbie, reports that 333 people have been killed there over the previous month. This includes 139 men, 117 women, and 77 children). Property damage "has been exceedingly heavy." He concludes, though, that "the bearing and morale of the public has remained admirable."  

Battle of the Black Sea: German 155-ton naval ferry barge (Marinefährprahm) F 130 hits a mine and is beached. Later, it is refloated, repaired, and put back in service.

Luftwaffe aircraft sink 950-ton Soviet auxiliary minesweeper T-494. There are nineteen survivors and twenty dead.
Hitler and Mussolini in Salzburg 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Hermann Goering, Karl Doenitz, Kurt Zeitzler, and other officials at the map table in Schloss Klessheim, 29 April 1942 (ONB).
Axis Relations: Following his successful (final) speech to the Reichstag on the 26th, Adolf Hitler takes his personal train down to Salzburg, near his home at Berchtesgaden, to meet Mussolini. The two dictators meet at Schloss Klessheim for a two-day meeting to review the war situation in front of Hitler's customary 1:1000 maps. Hermann Goering, Foreign Minister Ribbentrop, Field Marshal Keitel, General Jodl, and other top Axis officials are there as well, signifying the importance of the meeting.

As usual, Hitler does most of the talking. These sessions invariably default to Hitler engaging in extended monologues as Mussolini listens in silence. Hitler tells Mussolini that his sole foreign policy dream was "annulling Bolshevism as a military power." The summer's offensive in the USSR would accomplish this. After that, Hitler says he would be able to shift his main forces west for a showdown with the western Allies. He hints that Stalin might be ready to negotiate terms due to supposed frustration with the failure of the British and Americans to open up a second front in France. 

The two men agree that, now that the Wehrmacht had survived the winter intact, nothing could save the Red Army. Privately, however, Mussolini is not so sure. To his son-in-law and Foreign Minister, Count Galeazzo Ciano, he reveals resentment over his utter reliance on Hitler and the Wehrmacht. Mussolini, now privy to Hitler's plans for another grand offensive in the East ("Case Blue"), notes that the war's outcome would be decided by the end of the summer in the steppes of Russia.

Nothing is really decided today. The dictators will meet again on the morning of the 30th to discuss military plans.
The crater at Tessenderlo, Belgium, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The massive crater at Tessenderlo, Belgium, resulting from the explosion of 29 April 1942 (Tessenderlo Group).
US Military: General Harold Huston George, 49, is mortally wounded in a ground accident at Batchelor Field near Darwin, Australia. A Curtiss P-40 loses control while taking off and slams into George's Lockheed C-40. Victorville Air Force Base in California is renamed George Air Force Base in his honor in June 1950.

Holocaust: A date is set for all Dutch Jews to wear a Yellow Star of David badge: 3 May 1942.

Belgian Homefront: An explosion caused by ammonium nitrate rocks a chemical factory (Produits Chimiques de Tessenderloo (PCT)) in Tessenderlo, Belgium. Ammonium nitrate is often used as fertilizer but also as an ingredient in explosives. The shockwaves are felt in Antwerp and Brussels and the explosion creates a crate 70 meters wide and 23 meters deep. Accidental explosions during its manufacture and transport cause many tragedies over the years, such are in Beirut in 2020, so the incident is not necessarily military sabotage. There are 189 deaths.
Tanforan Assembly Center, 29 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Internees on the mess line at the Tanforan Assembly Center in California, 29 April 1942 (Dorothy Lange, National Archives 537677).
American Homefront: Top Hollywood entertainers visit the White House to kick off a 30-city tour promoting the sale of war bonds. Among the celebrities in attendance are Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Cary Grant, Desi Arnaz, Groucho Marx, Laurel and Hardy, Charles Boyer, Charlotte Greenwood, Claudette Colbert, Olivia de Havilland, Spencer Tracy. and Betty Grable. Actress Carole Lombard, of course, perished during a tour selling war bonds on 16 January 1942.

In a sign of the times, just as the top Hollywood stars are in Washington dining with the President, civil defense authorities order all theater marquees in Times Square to be blacked out.

The San Francisco News reports that the local FBI office has made searches and raids in 24 cities and towns of Northern California for aliens and contraband articles. The Wartime Civil Control Administration, meanwhile, reports that it is having difficulty finding farmers to work all the fields being abandoned (unwillingly, of course) by the evacuating Japanese-Americans. A columnist in the same newspaper, Arthur Caylor, meanwhile, reports that many of the areas in San Francisco being vacated by the Japanese-American residents are being condemned. There is a "sub-surface meeting-of-minds," he says, that "the Japanese shall never come back."

April 1942

April 1, 1942: Convoys Come to the USA 
April 2, 1942: Doolittle Raiders Leave Port
April 3, 1942: Japanese Attack in Bataan
April 4, 1942: Luftwaffe Attacks Kronstadt
April 5, 1942: Japanese Easter Sunday Raid on Ceylon
April 6, 1942: Japanese Devastation In Bay of Bengal
April 7, 1942: Valletta, Malta, Destroyed
April 8, 1942: US Bataan Defenses Collapse
April 9, 1942: US Defeat in Bataan
April 10, 1942: The Bataan Death March
April 11, 1942: The Sea War Heats Up
April 12, 1942: Essen Raids Conclude Dismally
April 13, 1942: Convoy QP-10 Destruction
April 14, 1942: Demyansk Breakout Attempt
April 15, 1942: Sobibor Extermination Camp Opens
April 16, 1942: Oil Field Ablaze in Burma
April 17, 1942: The Disastrous Augsburg Raid
April 18, 1942: The Doolittle Raid bombs Japan
April 19, 1942: British in Burma Escape
April 20, 1942: The Operation Calendar Disaster
April 21, 1942: Germans Relieve Demyansk

2021

Sunday, August 9, 2020

April 3, 1942: Japanese Attack in Bataan

Friday 3 April 1942

General Erwin Rommel on 3 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
German General Erwin Rommel makes a surprise visit to the most advanced Afrika Korps base 89.6 km north of Tobruk on the North Africa front, 3 April 1942 (Koeth, Cord, Federal Archive Image 101I-441-1390-17).
Battle of the Pacific: The Japanese of General Homma's 14th Imperial Army begins a massive preparatory bombardment of Allied forces along the Orion-Bagac Lineon defensive line on the Bataan Peninsula at 09:00 on 3 April 1942. The barrage is centered on Mount Samat, which is the center of the Allied line and the point where US Army I and II Corps meet. The Japanese 4th Division and 65th Brigade also attack in this area on the left flank of US II Corps, which is manned by two Filipino Divisions (21st and 41st). The Japanese quickly gain ground in a rough landscape and plan on capturing the entire peninsula in one week. Japanese attacks in the I Corps (western) portion of the line gain little ground. After dark, the US forces launch a counterattack that regains some ground.

Concerned about Japanese use of the French Frigate Shoals as staging areas for flying boat attacks on Hawaii (as were attempted twice in March), the US Navy mines the area. Light minelayers USS Pruitt, Preble, Sicard, and Tracy lay the mines. The US also will station a destroyer permanently there.
Wilson NC Daily Times, 3 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
The Wilson (North Carolina) Daily News, 3 April 1942. The main headline is, "Grave Reverses Mark Allied Burma Defense."
Battle of the Indian Ocean: Japanese bombers attack Mandalay, Burma, with devastating results on 3 April 1942. While they have attacked the city previously, the Japanese are helped this time by weather conditions that create a firestorm (firestorms require certain meteorological factors and are not just the product of dropping a lot of bombs). Incendiary bombs destroy about 60% of the wooden structures in the city and kill about 2000 people. The effects are magnified by the "lucky" destruction of city firefighting equipment in the raid. Bodies lie in the street for days. Ironically, the fort which is a centerpiece of the city is largely untouched.

Admiral Nagumo, in command of the powerful Kido Butai Japanese naval force that attacked Pearl Harbor, continues sailing into the Indian Ocean in accordance with the plans for Operation C. This operation, better known as the Indian Ocean Raid, aims to draw out the British Eastern Fleet for destruction by threatening Ceylon (Sri Lanka). British Admiral Sir James Somerville knows roughly what he is facing due to naval intelligence and has divided his force into two groups, A and B, based on speed. As the inferior force, the British are avoiding combat by day and have withdrawn to a point 600 miles (970 km) southwest of Ceylon to refuel. Nagumo is sailing toward a point roughly halfway between Somerville's forces and Ceylon. Both sides are unaware of the other's position.
HIJMS I-7 in a pre-war photo worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Japanese submarine HIJMS I-7 in 1937 (colorized by Irootoko Jr.).
Imperial Japanese Navy submarine I-7 (lT. Cdr Koizumi) torpedoes and sinks 9415-ton British refrigerated freighter Glenshiel about 300 miles east of the Maldive Islands. The ship sinks slowly, so Koizumi must use a total of four torpedoes and also shells the ship with his twin 140-mm deck gun. Everyone survives and is rescued by destroyer HMS Fortune.

In Burma, British Burma I Corps continues a withdrawal northward from the Allanmyo region. In the Sittang Valley, the Chinese prepare to make a stand at Pyinmana. Chinese 22nd and 96th Divisions there are under the control of Lieutenant General Joseph Stilwell, Commanding General American Army Forces, China, Burma, and India, though Chinese generals have not been following his orders.

The US Army Air Force sends six 10th Air Force B-17 bombers from Asansol Aerodrome, India, to Rangoon. They bomb warehouses and docks at the cost of one bomber.
Panzerschreck firing worldwartwo.filminspector.com
Panzerschreck in action.
Eastern Front: A temporary lull in larger operations continues all along the Eastern Front, but there is still a lot of local fighting. General Seydlitz has regrouped his forces for the relief attempt to the Demyansk Pocket and is ready to resume his attacks on 4 April. Rather than attack through the mud and trees, he will focus on a road further north. On the other side, the Soviets also have regrouped and reinforced their own forces. The Red Air Force has begun harassing attacks of German troops using old biplanes, often manned by women aviators, who cruise slowly at very low altitudes over the German camps at night and drop small bombs. The Germans take to calling these pilots the "Night Witches."

The Wehrmacht in the Demyansk area has begun using a new weapon, the Panzerschrek, on an experimental basis. This weapon is similar to a US Army bazooka and fires a hollow-point grenade that, when on target, can destroy a T-34 tank (the Panzerschreck is similar to but different than the later Panzerfaust). Today, Seydlitz reports that using the weapon requires nerve "and a generous endowment of luck" because the weapon's range is only 50 yards. Secret German hollow-charge shells (Rotkopf), meanwhile, are proving ineffective in the heavily wooded region because the shells tend to explode when they hit a branch en route to their targets.

European Air Operations: There is little activity on the Channel Front today. This lull follows a heavy bombing schedule for RAF Bomber Command over the past couple of weeks.
US freighter David H. Atwater, sunk 3 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
US freighter David H. Atwater, sunk on 3 April 1942 (Historical Collections of the Great Lakes, Bowling Green State University).
Battle of the Atlantic: At 03:40, U-552 (Kptlt. Erich Topp), on its eighth patrol out of St. Nazaire, surfaces and begins firing with its deck gun at 2438-ton US freighter David H. Atwater about ten miles east of Chincoteague Inlet, Virginia. The U-boat fires 93 shots and hits the vessel with about 50 of them. This sets the ship on fire and the crew is unable to abandon ship in an orderly fashion, instead simply leaping into the water. There are 24 deaths and only 3 survivors who manage to swim to an empty lifeboat. The use of a deck gun alone to sink a freighter is not unheard of, but it is unusual and shows that Captain Topp is trying to be efficient and conserving his torpedoes to prolong his patrol. USCGC Legare (WPC 144) and USCGC CG-218 arrive on the scene quickly and pick up the survivors. Some accounts state that this incident occurred late on 2 April 1942.

U-754 (Kptlt. Hans Oestermann), on its second patrol out of Brest, torpedoes and sinks 4839-ton US freighter Otho about 200 miles east of Cape Henry, Virginia. There are 32 dead and 21 survivors. Some of the survivors are not picked up until 25 April after drifting to within 150 miles of Bermuda, and one man dies an hour after being rescued.

U-505 (Kptlt. Axel-Olaf Loewe), on its second patrol out of Lorient, torpedoes and sinks 5775-ton US freighter West Irmo about 300 miles southwest of Takoradi (Sekondi-Takoradi), Ghana. There are 10 dead and 99 survivors. All of the dead are African stevedores who were sitting on a hatch that blew up when the torpedo hit. An attempt is made to tow the sinking West Irmo on 4 April, but this is unsuccessful and the ship is then intentionally sunk.

U-155 (Kptlt. Adolf Cornelius Piening), on its first patrol out of Kiel, hits 6882-ton US tanker Gulfstate with two torpedoes about 50 miles southeast of Marathon Key, Florida. The tanker immediately bursts into flame and sinks in four minutes, and the crew is unable to launch lifeboats. There are 43 dead and 18 survivors, with the survivors being picked up within hours by a Coast Guard seaplane and USS YP-351.

U-702 (Kptlt. Wolf-Rüdiger von Rabenau), on its first patrol out of Helgoland, is lost to a mine on or about this date. There are no survivors. U-702 finishes its career with no victories.

German raider Thor worldwartwo.filminspector.com
German raider Thor (HSK 4), as it would have been seen by the crew of one of its victims such as Norwegian freighter Aust on 3 April 1942.
German raider Thor, operating in the South Atlantic, uses its floatplane and deck gun to stop 5630-ton Norwegian freighter Aust. The ship is sunk with placed charges after the Germans take the entire crew as prisoners.

Luftwaffe aircraft bomb and damage/sink 6854-ton British freighter Empire Starlight at its dock in Murmansk (the date of its "sinking" is disputed). The Empire Starlight was part of Convoy PQ 13. The Soviets later raise the Empire Starlight in 1945 and rename it Murmansk.

The Luftwaffe also bombs and sinks British freighter New Westminster City from Convoy PQ-13 at Murmansk. This vessel also is later raised. In the same attack, the Luftwaffe severely damages Polish freighter Tobruk. It is later repaired and returned to service in September 1942.

British freighter Gypsum Prince sinks after colliding with fellow British freighter Voco about four miles off Lewes, Delaware. There are 20 survivors and five dead.

The youngest British seamen on 3 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
"George Thomas the 16-year-old anti-aircraft gunner." Onboard freighter SS Empire Airman, Liverpool, England, 3 April 1942 (© IWM A 8110).
Battle of the Mediterranean: Italian coaster Antonio Landi hits a mine and sinks off Punta Platamoni, near Kotor, Montenegro. There is one death.

Perpetual air raids continue all across Malta on 3 April 1942 as Luftwaffe General Kesselring attempts to subdue the island. Unexploded bombs are becoming a major problem for Malta. It is very hazardous work and many officers lose their lives doing it. 

Battle of the Black Sea: Soviet destroyer Shaumian sinks of unknown causes at Rybachka-Gelendshik in the Black Sea. The vessel is later scrapped.

US Military: Admiral Chester W. Nimitz officially takes command of Pacific Ocean Areas (POA). The Southeast Pacific Area, currently a backwater used mainly as a supply route to Australia, remains under the command of Rear Admiral John F Shafroth. General Douglas MacArthur is the commander of the South West Pacific Area (SWPA).

The 21st and 22d Transport Squadrons, Air Transport Command, 5th Air Force, are activated at Archerfield (near Brisbane)) and Essendon (near Melbourne) Airdromes, Australia, respectively. The 39th Pursuit Group of 39th Pursuit Squadron transfers from Mount Gambier to Williamstown, Australia.
Short Snorter 3 April 1942 worldwartwo.filminspector.com
A "Short Snorter" dated 3 April 1942. This is a banknote signed by fellow travelers on an airplane. Each of the men signing it would have had their own bill. These were considered a good luck practice and memorialized a temporary bond (Collectors Weekly).
American Homefront: "The Jungle Book," an independent production largely created by the Korda family (Zoltan, Alexander, and Vincent) based on the book by Rudyard Kipling, is released by United Artists. Starring Sabu as Mowgli, the film earns the studio $1.3 million in rentals and becomes a big hit for UA. After the war, "The Jungle Book" is released or released in European countries such as France and the United Kingdom and becomes a hit once again. 

Future History: Carson Wayne Newton is born in Norfolk, Virginia. Carson learns to play the piano, guitar, and steel guitar at an early age and begins singing in supper clubs with his older brother, Jerry. The act begins getting bookings on local television shows and in 1958 it is spotted on one of them by a Las Vegas booking agent. The agent signs the brother act and they wind up performing six shows daily in Vegas for the next five years. This leads to television show appearances and other opportunities. In 1963, billed as Wayne Newton, Carson is signed by Capitol Records as a solo act and has a Top 40 hit with 'Danke Schoen." This leads to a spectacular career in showbusiness for the man who becomes known as "Mr. Las Vegas." As of 2020, Wayne Newton remains active in show business.

Marsha Mason is born in St. Louis, Missouri. She becomes an accomplished actress who is nominated for four Academy Awards in the 1970s and 1980s. She also is well-known for marrying playwright Neil Simon, who gives her some of her best roles and writes three of her Oscar-nominated parts. As of 2020, Marsha Mason remains active on television.
Munster, Indiana, Daily times, 3 April 1942 worldwartwo.flminspector.com
A page of apparently random news photos from the Munster, Indiana, Times, 3 April 1942.

April 1942

April 1, 1942: Convoys Come to the USA 
April 2, 1942: Doolittle Raiders Leave Port
April 3, 1942: Japanese Attack in Bataan
April 4, 1942: Luftwaffe Attacks Kronstadt
April 5, 1942: Japanese Easter Sunday Raid on Ceylon
April 6, 1942: Japanese Devastation In Bay of Bengal
April 7, 1942: Valletta, Malta, Destroyed
April 8, 1942: US Bataan Defenses Collapse
April 9, 1942: US Defeat in Bataan
April 10, 1942: The Bataan Death March
April 11, 1942: The Sea War Heats Up
April 12, 1942: Essen Raids Conclude Dismally
April 13, 1942: Convoy QP-10 Destruction
April 14, 1942: Demyansk Breakout Attempt
April 15, 1942: Sobibor Extermination Camp Opens
April 16, 1942: Oil Field Ablaze in Burma
April 17, 1942: The Disastrous Augsburg Raid
April 18, 1942: The Doolittle Raid bombs Japan
April 19, 1942: British in Burma Escape
April 20, 1942: The Operation Calendar Disaster
April 21, 1942: Germans Relieve Demyansk

2021